Houstonโs airports are busy places with distractions galore โ passengers rushing to make their flights, announcements blaring through speakers at every turn, a plethora of places to eat or drink, and shops with oodles things to buy.
Thereโs also art. Lots of it.
Huh, you might think. I didnโt know there was art at the airport. Iโve never seen it. Actually, you have, whether you realize it or not.
If youโve driven down JFK Boulevard on the way into George Bush International Airport and seen the three huge stainless steel and LED light objects that look like water spraying. Thatโs Radiant Fountains, a sculpture by Dennis Oppenheim.
Perhaps youโve gone through security in the main lobby at Hobby airport and noticed a suspended steel and acrylic human figure flying with open arms. Thatโs Vector HH, by Luca Buvoli.
Look almost everywhere in either of Houstonโs airports and thereโs art to be found. About 350 works in total, varying in size comprising the largest public art collection in Texas. Jewelry, ceramics, painting, photography, textiles, sculpture, sound and light pieces, and large installation art, itโs all there. And presently itโs all overseen by one man:ย Alton DuLaney, The Curator of Public Art for the Houston Airports.
โSome pieces at the airports date back to the ’70s when there used to be a sporadic means of collecting,โ says DuLaney. โWeโd get donated a piece or someone would decide a wall needed some art, so someone would go and buy a painting.โ
This all changed in 1999 when the City of Houston established a “percentage for art” program through a city ordinance that required all eligible vertical construction projects have 1.75 percent of their budget dedicated to art. Suddenly there was an ongoing revenue source for the airports to build a public art collection.
However, DuLaney is quick to point out that the money the airports use to buy art is not taxpayer money, but rather funds collected from passengers and airline fees.
One of the early works purchased was Terry Allenโs Countree Music located at Bush Airportโs Terminal A. The piece is a bronze cast of a 30-foot oak tree sprouting from a terrazzo floor depicting the map of the world (with Houston at its center as marked by the tree) and includes a sound element that serenades passengers as they walk by.
At the same time, they commissioned Houston Bayou, a Dixie Friend Gay mosaic in Terminal B comprised of 1ยฝ million pieces of glass that depict the flora and fauna of the Houston region.
But is this money well spent? Well just imagine how sterile and unwelcoming the airports would be with nothing but institutional bare walls and spaces. And then picture what that would do to the moods of the many already tense passengers.
DuLaney lays it out more purposefully. Having art in the airport, he believes, is important to the airport/city the passengers, and the artists.
โA large percentage of our passengers are catching connecting flights and never leave the airportโ, says DuLaney. โThey spend a couple of hours and then fly off. Art showcases what the city of Houston has to offer, it reflects both the culture of the city and says that we are culturally aware and support our art community.
Art, he says, also provides a respite from the otherwise hectic travel experience. โItโs nice to offer a passenger time to slow down and contemplate a piece of art and spend some time with it before they go rushing to catch their flight.โ Additionally, DuLaney points out that a lot of the traveling public might not go to galleries or museums, so this may be their only opportunity to see and appreciate art in person.
For the artists, itโs a huge win. Not only does the airport pay for the work, but being part of the permanent collection provides an unparalleled source of exposure. โIn 2019 pre-pandemic, the Houston airport system served 60 million passengers for an average of 1 million people a weekโ, says DuLaney. โIn comparison, The Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the largest art museum in the region, had just under 1 million visitors in a year. So, we provide exposure in one week what an artist would get in one year at the museum.โ
DuLaney’s belief in the importance of art was born long before he became curator for the airports three years ago. A fifth-generation Splendora, Texas native, DuLaney pursued an art career in New York, Los Angeles, and Europe before coming back to Houston via a full master’s degree scholarship at the University of Houstonย and a chance to work at the Blaffer Art Museum. There he worked with the museum’s public art collection and ended up teaching a public art class at UH for a couple of years.
Once his studies were done, it just so happened that the previous airport curator was moving on, and so in 2019, DuLaney took on the job. “I came in at a really good time as the airport was just going into its international terminal expansion program so there were lots of opportunities,โ says DuLaney.
Opportunities not just to purchase, but to strengthen the collectionโs local roots. โMy focus is on Texas artistsโ, says DuLaney. โHouston is such a diverse city that you can have a cosmopolitan art collection just by working with Houston artists alone.โ

While DuLaney is a team of one overseeing the entire program from curation to conservation, he is certainly not the only decision-maker when it comes to what art to purchase for the collection. In addition to working with the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs and Houston Art Alliance, DuLaney works with the Aviation Director, Mario Diaz, who often has a vision of what he’d like to see.
โSo, heโll say weโre building this area and we need art for the spaceโ, says DuLaney. โThen we do a call for submissions which goes out to artists, galleries, and foundations. We ask for art in two categories portable works, meaning small objects like paintings drawing, and photos โ art that can
be moved around. And site-specific works or commissions, art that becomes part of the architecture.โ
Then a panel of experts, DuLaney being one of them, review and choose the work.
Finding and installing the portable work is relatively easy. Artists or galleries have these pieces readily available and their size is generally manageable. Itโs the commissions that are complicated.
โAll installations are required to have a structural engineerโ, says DuLaney. โIf a piece is going to be hanging from the ceiling we have to go back and find architectural drawings of the space engineered to make sure itโs sound and safe and not going to fall.โ Not to mention, trying to install a large piece of art in a busy airport that runs 24/7 is an exercise in careful logistics.
As far as the logistics of the collection itself โ thatโs an ever-growing proposition. When asked if the airports were ever going to be full up with art, DuLaney gives an emphatic, never going to happen response. The airport he says will always be growing/changing, providing room for more art.
โWeโre doing this new international terminal now and weโll get about 30 years out of it before itโs renovated again as technology happens and travel habits change,โ says DuLaney. โTerminal A is a 50-year-old building so there will be renovations on that. Hobby is expanding. Thereโs always another project. And then thereโs Ellington Field, which right now houses private and some military flights but is designated to be Houston’s spaceport for suborbital flights in the near future.โ
Back to the present, DuLaney is working to make visitors more aware of the art by creating gallery spaces and developing a self-guided tour for passengers with time to kill between flights.
And while nothing beats seeing art in person, even if youโre not planning on flying any time soon, you can become more familiar with some of the pieces of the airport collections online by visiting fly2houston.comย . There youโll see pieces from both Hobby and George Bush airports along with a map of where the art pieces are located. Itโs a good primer for art-spotting on your next airport visit.
Knowing that people will see the airport collections at some point is DuLaney’s greatest pleasure. “One of the things I love most about my job is that generations from now there will be other people coming to the airport and appreciating the work I’m accomplishing now because this artwork will still be on display for them to enjoy.”
This article appears in Jan 1 โ Dec 31, 2021.




